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Inflation Report November 2005. Output and supply.

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Presentation on theme: "Inflation Report November 2005. Output and supply."— Presentation transcript:

1 Inflation Report November 2005

2 Output and supply

3 Chart 3.1 Whole-economy and private sector output (a) (a) Chained volume measures of gross value added at basic prices. (b) This chart uses a proxy measure for private sector output which excludes public administration, defence and social security, education and health from the average measure of gross value added. The figure for 2005 Q3 was estimated using information in the preliminary GDP release.

4 Chart 3.2 Whole-economy output (a) (a) Chained volume measure at basic prices. (b) 2005 Q3 data were unavailable at the time of the August Report.

5 Chart 3.3 Official estimates and indicators of service sector output Sources: Bank of England, BCC, CIPS, ONS and Ashley, J, Driver, R, Hayes, S and Jeffery, C (2005), ‘Dealing with data uncertainty’, Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Spring, pages 23–29. (a) The survey-based estimate is derived from the CIPS and BCC surveys using simple OLS regressions. (b) The distribution and public sectors are included by aggregating the survey-based estimate in the red line and official data for distribution and public sector output, appropriately weighted..

6 Chart 3.4 Sectoral contributions to quarterly GDP growth (a) (a) Chained volume measure at market prices. (b) Includes agriculture, extraction, utilities and the difference between GDP at market prices and GDP at basic prices..

7 Chart 3.5 Oil and gas extraction (a) Actual index averages 100 in 2002. The data for this chart were released after the GDP data shown in Chart 3.4.

8 Chart 3.6 Whole-economy output (a) and employment (b) (a) Chained volume measure at basic prices. (b) LFS data. 2005 Q3 figure is for growth in June to August 2005 compared with the same three months a year earlier.

9 Chart 3.7 Whole-economy output (a) and hours worked (b) (a) Chained volume measure at basic prices. (b) LFS data on actual hours worked. Average hours worked is defined as total hours worked divided by the number of people in employment. 2005 Q3 figures are for growth in June to August 2005 compared with the same three months a year earlier.

10 Chart 3.8 Net migrant flows to the United Kingdom (a) Sources: GAD and ONS. (a) Data up to mid-2004 are changes in the population less births and deaths. Figures from mid-2004 are GAD projections. Data are for net flows between mid-year points. The mid-2003 to mid-2004 figure is approximate, estimated using information contained in the ONS’s population statistics release in August 2005, available at: www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/popest0805.pdf. (b) The A8 countries are: the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. (c) Assumptions made in 2004.

11 Chart 3.9 Comparison of average annual gross earnings across countries (a) Source: Eurostat. (a) Average annual gross earnings in industry and services (of full-time employees in companies with ten or more employees). Data are for 2003, at current prices, based on purchasing power parity.

12 Chart 3.10 Private sector labour productivity (a) Based on LFS microdata and ONS public sector employment data. (b) Data on private sector employment are calculated here as the residual of total LFS employment less public sector employment. Between 1994 and 1999, data for public sector employment are only available from the ONS on an annual basis. A quarterly path has, therefore, been interpolated by Bank of England staff. The quarterly data for public sector employment are also only available on a non seasonally adjusted basis and so these data have been seasonally adjusted by Bank staff. Adjustments have also been made using LFS microdata to the ONS’s public sector employment series to take out the employees who are working in the public sector as their second job and where their first job is in the private sector.

13 Chart 3.11 Labour productivity by sector (a) (a) Gross value added per job, based on Workforce jobs. Workforce jobs data have been adjusted so as to be on a calendar quarter basis.

14 Chart 3.12 Private sector capital services (a) (a) See Oulton, N and Srinivasan, S (2003), ‘Capital stocks, capital services, and depreciation: an integrated framework’, Bank of England Working paper no. 192, for how these data are constructed.

15 Chart 3.13 Categories of inactivity (a) (a) Number of inactive people within the working-age population who want or do not want a job. Three-month moving average measures.

16 Tables

17 Table 3.A Surveys of factor utilisation (a) Sources: BCC and CBI. (a) Percentage of firms working at full capacity. The series are non seasonally adjusted. (b) Historical averages of survey balances can be used to gauge whether the economy is approaching ‘normal’ levels of factor utilisation. Different time periods though can give different impressions of what is ‘normal’. See the box on pages 24–25 of the February 2005 Report. (c) Also includes agriculture, energy and construction. 1995–2004 2005 Average (b) Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Manufacturing CBI 40 45 41 39 45 39 BCC (c) 36 41 40 38 35 Services BCC 39 44 38 36 35

18 Table 3.B Survey evidence on recruitment difficulties and labour shortages Sources: BCC, CBI and Deloitte/REC Report on Jobs. (a) Since 1995 except Deloitte/REC, where the average is since October 1997 and is based on monthly data. (b) Indices, for which 50 represents no change. (c) Data are non seasonally adjusted. (d) Percentage balance of firms. (e) Includes agriculture, energy and construction. (f) Manufacturing sector. (g) Percentages (weighted by respondents). 2004 2005 Average (a) Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Oct. Availability of agency staff (b) Deloitte/REC: Permanent 48 39 43 46 48 47 Deloitte/REC: Temporary 49 42 44 46 49 51 50 Recruitment difficulties (c)(d) BCC: Manufacturing (e) 65 66 51 60 58 44 n.a. BCC: Services 60 55 57 66 64 63 58 n.a. Factors likely to limit output (c)(f)(g) CBI: Skilled labour 12 13 14 11 16 n.a. CBI: Other labour 3 7 4 2 3 3 4 n.a.


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